The Bwog
Saturday in the Rockaways

A week ago, bwogger Armin Rosen traveled to the ends of the earth--at least for a New Yorker.

You're a long way from Manhattan by the time the A train finally reaches the most scenic stretch of track in the entire New York subway system. Once it finishes plodding 25 miles of subterranean darkness, the A speeds through a national wildlife refuge, and passes scenery more suited to New England or tidal Virginia than New York's largest and second most populous borough. But people don't travel to the Rockaways looking for a typical New York experience--while The L Magazine once deemed the Nassau Avenue G station (not far from the Rockaways, relatively speaking) one of the foulest-smelling places in New York, the Broad Channel station treats passengers waiting for Rockaway Beach-bound shuttle trains to a scent they probably never imagined encountering within the MTA system: salt air.

Broad Channel is an island in the middle of Jamaica Bay. Roughly 3,000 people live there, and many of them have backyards with access to the Bay, or views of the Rockaways or nearby JFK airport. If you squint you can almost see the Manhattan skyline towering incongruously in the distance, a reminder of how simultaneously close by and far away Broad Channel's few thousand stalwarts are from the city's chaos.


I was always half-curious as to whether or not the vaguely phallic protrusion of land jutting out of eastern Queens and into the Atlantic Ocean was actually there; whether it wasn't just a proverbial "conspiracy of cartographers" stuck onto the edge of the subway map to taunt grizzled city-dwellers with the possibility of escape. It does exist, and on first glance there isn't anything particularly spectacular about it: high-rise apartment projects and empty streets lined with low-lying neatly-organized single-family homes. If it weren't for the word "beach" on all the street signs and in the names of the subway stations I'd swear I was in Bay Ridge.

But Rockaway Beach's placid normalcy only establishes it as one of the last great unexploited places in New York. At 14 miles long, it's one of the largest urban beaches in the country, only 45 minutes from Manhattan's financial district. Yet while Coney Island has aquariums, baseball teams, amusement parks, music festivals, parades and the original Nathan's, Rockaway Beach has nothing--just some handball courts, some changing rooms, and the occasional Helado cart. It's this emptiness that gives the beach its charm--it boasts nothing but the unadulterated meeting of ocean and sand, and tries to be nothing other than a place to lazily watch the day go by or lazily get pummeled by the surf, which is thankfully freezing.

After hours spent relaxing, throwing back drinks and acquiring what would turn out to be some absolutely horrific sunburns, a once far-off thunderstorm ominously hovers over the south Rockaways and my group decides to call it a day. Our walk down the beach takes us past evidence that somebody's discovered the lethargic charm of the Rockaways after all, as the beach's pleasantly undeveloped boardwalk gives way to vast, vacant tracts reserved for yet-to-be-built upscale housing developments.

An hour later we're back to the world of psychotic taxi drivers, panhandlers and hotdog stands; to Manhattan and its sometimes unbearably grueling pace of life. It's a little strange to be walking down St. Mark's Place while digging grains of sand out of my scalp, and stranger still to be in the same city as a place so literally and figuratively remote as charmingly languid Rockaway Beach. Yet it's also gratifying to know that even in a place as gigantic as New York City, escape is only a subway ride away.


Posted by panda: [#1] [reply] [track]
( posted June 26, 2007 at 10:15 PM )
hahaha photobwogging hahaha
Posted by john: [#2] [reply] [track]
( posted June 26, 2007 at 10:28 PM )
hey my grandparents live there!

by the way, you're not allowed to park on any street their during the day...to keep the vacationers out...
Posted by qns pride: [#3] [reply] [track]
( posted June 26, 2007 at 10:33 PM )
Oh rocakaway... you were my after prom destination. good bwogpost. armin does a good job, and isn't snarky about ti!
Posted by ARR...: [#4] [reply] [track]
( posted June 26, 2007 at 11:06 PM )
...notice how "good job" and "isn't snarky" are in the same sentence?

Posted by I mean...: [#5] [reply] [track]
( posted June 26, 2007 at 11:08 PM )
....that post #4 was NOT posted by ARR, but was addressed to him directly.

Posted by ZvS: [#6] [reply] [track]
( posted June 27, 2007 at 12:16 AM )
BTW, those vast stretches of land aren't reserved for high-class housing projects... that's Edgemere, a terrifying land of sunken old building foundations, basketball courts buried under sand, and rough little clusters of houses and projects. I used to hang out there a little (although it's one of the windiest, most hellish places on Earth), and one day somebody got shot, at random, about a block from my usual haunt, by a gunman on the roof of a building.

Also, the streets that don't just fade into the brush are all freshly paved with brand new signs, at intersections where no building is visible for blocks in any direction.

Forgotten NY: [ external link to www.forgotten-ny.com ]
Posted by ARR: [#7] [reply] [track] (in reply to #6)
( posted June 27, 2007 at 12:44 AM )
At least part of is--there's a huge residential development going up in the B 60s that I photographed. I just liked that picture of the subway signal and decided to use that one instaed.
Posted by ARR: [#8] [reply] [track] (in reply to #6)
( posted June 27, 2007 at 1:14 AM )
And if you for some reason want to own a little piece of the "Edgemere of reality," go here: [ external link to www.arvernebythesea.com ]
Posted by Crooklyn : [#9] [reply] [track]
( posted June 27, 2007 at 1:33 AM )
Next you should hit up Brighton Beach
Posted by excellent,: [#10] [reply] [track]
( posted June 27, 2007 at 9:38 AM )
excellent post. and #4 is heartily endorsed.
Posted by Hey: [#11] [reply] [track]
( posted July 18, 2007 at 12:10 AM )
Excellent post Armin, captured the sentiments finely.
Name:
Email:
Reply to:

Describe this color in one lowercase word.

About Us

Bwog is compiled by the staff of The Blue and White, Columbia University's undergraduate magazine. [ more ]

Contact Us

Please send tips to bwgossip@columbia.edu.

Questions or concerns? Email bweditors@columbia.edu.

Bwog is always looking for new writing talent. Email bwog@columbia.edu.

In Print

Search

Comment Policy

Our Favorite Comments

agreed: [read]
"the business school can go only if they host the session in their exclusive library study rooms...."
impossible: [read]
"i believe the chairs will be somehow attached to each other in the auditorium -- so it will be nearly..."

Bwogroll

Commentariat
The Core Junction
Off Broadway
CollegeOTR
Greater or Smaller
The Mayor's Hotel
Barnard Zines
Peter and Rob Make Lists of Things

Technical

Our headlines are syndicated through Atom.
This site is powered by the Publicate Content Management System, which is available for free.
Our interface icons are from the free Silk set.